David Moyes' spell in charge at Old Trafford saw more records broken than that scene in the garden in Shaun of the Dead.

However, unlikely Simon Pegg's love of The Second Coming in that fateful clip, these were generally all unwanted milestones, as defeat after soul-crushing defeat followed and Moyes was put out to pasture.

But which was the worst defeat of the Moyes tenure? One of several heavy losses to the title chasing sides? Or how about a minnow going into Old Trafford and plundering three points?

What about the straw that appears to have broken the camel's back, the 2-0 reverse at Goodison? Refresh your memories and then cast your vote below.

Liverpool 1-0 Man United, Sunday 1st September

Coming a week after a 0-0 bore draw with Chelsea at Old Trafford, United's tricky start to the season saw them head to Anfield, which has never been a happy hunting ground for David Moyes. During his time at Everton, the United boss went 12 games without a win there and his Red Devils career there got off to a similar start, thanks to a fourth minute Daniel Sturridge goal.

Man City 4-1 Man United, Sunday 22nd September

Moyes' baptism of fire continued three weeks later with a trip to what his predecessor termed 'the Temple of Doom.' And doom it proved to be, as the champions were bettered in all areas of the game, with summer signing Marouane Fellani looking lost going up against Yaya Toure, while centre-back pairing Rio Ferdinand and Nemanja Vidic were terrorised by Sergio Aguero.

Man United 1-2 West Brom, Saturday 28th September

Saido Berahino's winner saw West Brom win at Old Trafford for the first time since 1978 (Manchester United fans have had to get used to stats like that this season) as United slumped to their worst start to a league campaign since 1989-90.

(Image: John Peters)

Man United 0-1 Everton, Wednesday 4th December

The defending champions looked to be back on track after the West Brom defeat, but December started with them winning just one point from three games. The most galling defeat in that spell was a 1-0 home loss to Moyes' former club Everton - the first time the Toffees had won at Manchester United in 21 years (another one of those stats). Bryan Oviedo's late strike came just when United used to get their noses in front during these sort of games, as Roberto Martinez did at the first time of asking what David Moyes failed to do during his 11-year spell at the Toffees - win at Old Trafford.

Man United 2-1 Sunderland, Wednesday 22nd January

When does a win not feel like a win? When you crash out of the League Cup owing to the worst penalty shoot-out performance you're likely to see this year (and, yes, we are factoring in England's inevitable second round penalty exit in the World Cup). A bonkers finish to the Capital One Cup semi-final second leg saw David De Gea haplessly fumble United old boy Phil Bardsley's shot into the back of the net in the 119th minute to seemingly dump Moyes' boys out, only for Javier Hernandez to immediately slam home an equaliser. What we got next was an omnishambles of a penalty shoot-out, as four United players missed. You really shouldn't be losing shoot-outs 2-1, but that's just what happened.

(Image: Getty Images)

Man United 2-2 Fulham, Sunday 9th February

Or Crossgate, as it wasn't dubbed at the time. United's masterplan to beat the Premier League's bottom side was to cross, cross and cross again, as they sent in 81 balls from the flanks, a record since Opta began crunching such statistics. After trailing for almost an hour following Steve Sidwell's first-half goal, a quickfire double from Robin van Persie and Michael Carrick looked to have turned the game, only for Darren Bent to pounce in the period formally known as Fergie time.

Fulham's 6ft 7in centre-back Dan Burn, er, burned David Moyes' tactics after the game by comparing it to non-league football. "I've never headed that many balls since the Conference," he chuckled to himself.

Olympiakos 2-0 Man United, Tuesday 25th February

With their title defense all but over and having been knocked out of both domestic cups, Moyes' last chance of glory this season came in the Champions League. And boy, did his side very nearly blow it against the side perceived to be the poorest left in the competition.

A poor, disjointed 2-0 loss saw the knives come out again, but the Red Devils were able to dig themselves out of a hole in the second leg, after Robin van Persie helped himself to a hat-trick at Old Trafford.

Manchester United 0-3 Liverpool, Sunday 16th March

As if losing at Anfield at the start of the season was bad enough, Fergies' old nemeses secured a double in impressive fashion , absolutely dominating Moyes' men at Old Trafford. Steven Gerrard scored two penalties and missed a third, as the top four began to look out of reach.

(Image: PAUL ELLIS/AFP/Getty Images)

Manchester United 0-3 Manchester City, Tuesday 25th March

Less than ten days after the Liverpool debacle, United suffered another 3-0 home loss to a big rival, as City took less than a minute to open the scoring at Old Trafford. Worryingly, Manuel Pellegrini's men looked rarely troubled as they cantered to victory while Moyes appeared increasingly powerless to stop the tide.

Everton 2-0 Manchester United, Sunday 20th April

The straw that broke the camel's back? Moyes went back to his former stomping ground and was greeted by a man in a grim reaper costume , who obviously knew something we didn't. Yet more pain was furnished on the United support as the Toffees revelled in a 2-0 victory that meant United were mathematically out of the race for a Champions League spot.